Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 25th Sep 2007 12:28 UTC, submitted by stonyandcher
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btw - an OEM copy of Vista Home Premium on newegg is only a little over 100 bucks. Too bad it's hardware locked - as you can never upgrade a computer with the OEM copy of Vista. (you have to get retail version for that)
Actually, I have tested this theory and all you have to do is tell the people on the phone that the motherboard was defective. They instantly proceed to activate vista.
Edited 2007-09-25 19:14






Member since:
2006-09-29
Uh, hate to tell you, but enthusiasts generally do not buy Dell or HP. They go to newegg or frys, buy parts that they want and install whatever OS.
I myself, bought an OEM Vista Home Premium two weeks ago for an MPC machine, and also installed Debian 64 on a different machine for doing real computer work (ie: development).
Both machines are my own creation.
The Vista box is the appliance PC -- it's hooked to the big screen TV for movies and games, with digital wireless audio for stereo. It's the brain dead box - a glorified DVR appliance that looks pretty on the TV, and people say - "wow you have your computer hooked up to the TV?" when they visit, and I correct them. "No, my computer is upstairs. This is the Vista media zombie".
btw - an OEM copy of Vista Home Premium on newegg is only a little over 100 bucks. Too bad it's hardware locked - as you can never upgrade a computer with the OEM copy of Vista. (you have to get retail version for that)